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Home/Biblical and Theological/A Living Hope

A Living Hope

What does Peter mean when he says that we are “born again to a living hope”?

Written by Stan Gale | Monday, September 16, 2024

Our hope lives because Christ lives. Our hope cannot fail because Christ cannot die. He lives and reigns in victory. The writer of Hebrews describes our hope in objective terms in reference to the finished work of Christ. 

 

“… according to His abundant mercy has begotten us again to a living hope” (1 Peter 1:3)

Electric cars have been in the news quite a bit lately, particularly with gas prices going through the roof. One area of concern, however, has been how far EVs can travel on a single charge. Even the most capable of batteries holds the potential of leaving a driver stranded when their charge is depleted.

As Christians, we do not need to be worried about the power needed to reach our destination. Peter tells us we are powered now by the resurrection life of Jesus Christ. Ours is a living hope.

What is a living hope? First, let’s understand what hope is. Hope is not wishful thinking. “I hope it doesn’t rain.” “I hope my team makes the playoffs.” That sort of hope is more hope-so. It carries no assurance, only possibility at worst and probability at best. It offers no certainty.

The hope Peter has in mind is something completely different. It carries absolute certainty. Ours is not a hope-so hope but a know-so hope. It engenders confident expectation, assured conviction, and vibrant certainty. It will neither fail nor will it disappoint.

From our experience, even the surest of things can fail.

Read More

Related Posts:

  • The Longing of Hope
  • A Reason for Hope
  • Hope-Filled Faith
  • The Hope the World Needs, But Just Can’t Find
  • Why “Is God with Me?” Is the Wrong Question to Ask

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